The Herald

Scotland’s Nobel Laureates should be celebrated and here’s how they can be...

My husband is a Laureate but many Scots have not heard of him, writes

- Patricia Mirrlees

“GROWING up in Scotland, you learn how to talk and you learn how to tell a joke and you can get to a punchline… you can convey ideas quickly.

“So we were able to convey to people that this was actually a pretty interestin­g and valuable concept that people could use in science and it certainly helped my career… but it wouldn’t have happened if I was not Scottish,” so said David Macmillan, crediting his winning the Nobel Prize in Chemistry with Benjamin List last week to his Scottish education.

A pupil at New Stevenston Primary School and Bellshill Academy, he did his undergradu­ate degree at Glasgow University, which was the foundation for “everything I have become as a scientist and a person”.

My husband, Professor Sir James Mirrlees (Nobel Laureate 1996 in Economic Sciences) who was born in Minnigaff, Galloway, would have agreed, going to primary school in Newton Stewart and Douglas-ewart High School.

He depended on bursaries and prize money to pursue an undergradu­ate degree at Edinburgh University.

Richard Henderson (Nobel Laureate 2017 in Chemistry) has a similar story – attending Newcastlet­on Primary near Hawick, Hawick High and Boroughmui­r High in Edinburgh, before an undergradu­ate degree at Edinburgh University.

To date, 18 Scots have been awarded Nobel Prizes since they were inaugurate­d in 1901.

According to Richard Henderson, this is 25 times greater than the world-average per capita, with only Switzerlan­d and Austria coming close.

In 1902, a year after the Nobel Prizes were establishe­d, Sir Ronald Ross, of Shandwick, was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his work on malaria.

He is the grandfathe­r of the current chief of Clan Ross. Since Ross, Scots have been awarded Nobel Prizes in every category except Literature, although the great Gaelic poet Sorley Maclean was nominated for that in 1992.

In the past nine years, between 2013 and 2021, there have been eight Scottish Nobel Laureates, an achievemen­t for a country that has a small population of about

5.5 million people.

In one year alone, 2016, four of the Nobel Laureates were Scottish.

All these achievemen­ts should have been a cause for national celebratio­n.

David Macmillan’s award spotlights the fact that Scotland has been very successful in producing Nobel Laureates but has failed in giving them national recognitio­n.

Alfred Nobel in Scotland and the 18 Scottish Nobel Laureates are a valuable part of Scotland’s heritage that has been overlooked for too long.

Celebratin­g Nobel’s Scottish connection­s and our Scottish Nobel Laureates would raise Scotland’s image as a hub of science and discovery and encourage young Scots to realise that everything is possible – that there are no limits to their potential.

So what can Scotland do to honour its Nobel Laureates? Here are a few suggestion­s: l create The Scottish Nobel Fund to help finance a series of initiative­s to highlight the achievemen­ts of the Scottish Nobel Laureates and the life of Alfred Nobel in Scotland; l have a permanent display area dedicated to the Scottish Nobel Laureates in the Scottish National Portrait Gallery.

In 2007, a portrait of my husband was presented to the Gallery. On show for only a few months, it was put in storage for a decade. It was displayed again in December 2018, after his death that year.

Sir Mervyn King, former governor of the Bank of England, at the unveiling of Jim’s portrait pointed out: “This Gallery is the world’s first purpose-built portrait gallery, opened in 1889 and championed by the historian Thomas Carlyle, who wrote that ‘Historical Portrait Galleries far transcend in worth all other kinds of National Collection­s of Pictures whatever’. Scotland led the way and continues to do so.”

After the death of Scottish Nobel Laureate David Thouless in April 2019, collecting the portraits of all the living Scottish Laureates became a priority.

The Gallery had commission­ed portraits of some of the Scottish Laureates when the coronaviru­s pandemic put everything on hold.

When Jim received the Nobel Prize in 1996, he said he was both delighted and a little embarrasse­d at all the attention. Jim had an exceptiona­l mind, and he was also exceptiona­lly modest – embodying the values of small-town Scotland where you

worked hard and lived without ostentatio­n.

Only after Jim’s death, I found in an old file box marked “Nobel stuff” a pile of letters he had received when the Prize was announced. Among the “Nobel stuff”, was a letter from Margaret Wilson, an old classmate at Douglas-ewart High. She wrote: “Was it really August 1947 that my mother told me on the evening of my first day at school that you would be the Dux of that year’s intake and added, ‘that boy will go far’? This bewildered me – I did not realise she was talking in terms of what you would achieve academical­ly. I thought she meant you might go to the United States.”

Another idea would be to have an interactiv­e display in one area of the National Museum of Scotland.

Jim’s Nobel medal will go to the National Museum, which has been displaying the Nobel medals of Sir Alexander Fleming,

Sir James Black and Lord John Boyd-orr on three different floors in glass cases.

Instead, feature all the Scottish Laureates in one area using audio visual technology, interactiv­e display boards, photograph­s and medals, if donated.

The recent Scottish Laureates could record their stories in their own words. Scottish actors could narrate the history of those deceased. That way, Scottish children and other visitors could learn more about the Laureates and their discoverie­s.

Few of the Scottish Laureates have blue plaques in Scotland. Several, such as Sir

Alexander Fleming, are honoured by them in England. Dr David Hannay, chief of

Clan Hannay, has organised with the Galloway Preservati­on Society a blue plaque to be placed on the cottage where Jim was born in Minnigaff.

Let’s create an “Alfred Nobel in Scotland Centre” with a guided tour of the Ardeer Peninsula in Ayrshire.

We should reopen Irvine’s The Big Idea, closed in 2003, as the Nobel in Scotland Centre, focusing on the life and work of Alfred Nobel and his vast factory at Ardeer – which employed 13,000 people at its height – his life in Scotland, and his legacy of the Nobel Prizes, showcasing all Nobel Laureates and highlighti­ng the Scottish ones.

Alfred Nobel took out a British patent for his dynamite in 1867. Failing to start a factory in England, Nobel, in April 1871 – 150 years ago this year – establishe­d his British Dynamite Company Ltd (later Nobel’s Explosives Company Ltd) at Ardeer with the backing of John Downie, the general manager of the Glasgow firm, Fairfield Engineerin­g and Shipbuildi­ng

Company. The records are in Glasgow University archives.

In a letter to his brother in 1871, Nobel wrote: “Picture to yourself everlastin­g bleak sand dunes with no buildings. Only rabbits find a little nourishmen­t here… It is a sand desert where the wind always blows often howls filling the ears with sand. Between us and America, there is nothing but water – a sea whose mighty waves are always raging and foaming. Without work the place would be intolerabl­e.”

Other parts of Scotland have a connection to Nobel.

Some of the rock powder required in the factory process was found in Skye and Aberdeensh­ire. Nobel bought the Westquarte­r Chemical Company, near Falkirk, to produce detonators and establishe­d another nearby at Redding Moor to supply that with fulminate.

He also acquired facilities at Irvine harbour to export his explosives. He bought, as his base in Scotland, Hawthorn Cottage, 1 Polmont Road, Laurieston, from his chief chemist George Mcroberts. It is still standing.

As well as the centre, visitors could have a guided tour of the ruined site of the Nobel factory on the Ardeer Peninsula and explore its areas of biodiversi­ty.

To celebrate this, surely day tours for visitors to the National Museum of Scotland, the Scottish National Portrait Gallery, the Alfred Nobel in Scotland Centre, the site of the old Ardeer factory and the Ardeer Peninsula. This would be a boost to Ayrshire tourism, which already attracts visitors to the Robert Burns Birthplace Museum at Alloway and Culzean Castle.

Annual lectures could also be establishe­d, one for universiti­es and another for schools, to be given by a Nobel Laureate of any nationalit­y in Scotland’s seven cities in rotation.

Finally, why not have a Nobel Laureates woodland? Wangari Maathai (Nobel Laureate, Peace Prize 2004) planted a tree when she learned she had been awarded the prize.

The Nobel Laureates should be a source of national pride and all have left a legacy that should be remembered for ever more.

We were able to convey to people this was actually a pretty interestin­g and valuable concept

 ?? ??
 ?? Picture: Walter Nurnberg/sspl/getty ?? Alfred Nobel set up what was to become the world’s largest commercial explosives factory at Ardeer, Ayrshire, during the late 19th century
Picture: Walter Nurnberg/sspl/getty Alfred Nobel set up what was to become the world’s largest commercial explosives factory at Ardeer, Ayrshire, during the late 19th century
 ?? ?? David Macmillan last week won Nobel Prize for Chemistry Picture: Denise Applewhite
Alfred Nobel set up Nobel Prize and also a vast explosives factory at Ardeer
David Macmillan last week won Nobel Prize for Chemistry Picture: Denise Applewhite Alfred Nobel set up Nobel Prize and also a vast explosives factory at Ardeer
 ?? ?? James Mirrlees, Nobel Laureate 1996 in Economic Sciences, with wife Patricia
James Mirrlees, Nobel Laureate 1996 in Economic Sciences, with wife Patricia

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